It’s a good thing our pets can’t use credit cards.
John Przybys
John Przybys is a features writer who covers lifestyle topics, trends, popular culture, health and books. A native of Bedford, Ohio and a graduate of Kent State University, he covered news beats at papers in Ohio for 10 years before moving to Las Vegas to join the Review-Journal features staff.
The Las Vegas Book Festival has announced that Pulitzer Prize winner Colson Whitehead, poet and novelist Luis Rodriguez and author Sara Shepard and will headline this year’s event.
Although medical evidence still is lacking, proponents say hemp products can offer many health benefits.
It’s a beautiful gown, the sort you’d expect to see on a Disney princess or lovely bride. And despite the extravagant touches, it’s surprisingly affordable.
Think of TEDxUNLV as a festival — a Burning Man, perhaps — of ideas.
The comics anthology “Where We Live” offers stories about how the Route 91 Harvest festival shooting affected victims and the community.
Creators of a comics anthology about the Route 91 Harvest festival shootings will attend a signing Saturday.
Faith Lutheran CEO Steven Buuck oversees a 1,900-student school — and loves it.
“Alexander Hamilton,” historian and author Ron Chernow’s biography of the Founding Father, was published in April 2004.
“Hamilton” takes a historical figure who — let’s be honest — nobody found particularly interesting during American history class and somehow makes him seem to be America’s coolest Founding Father.
When the puck drops Monday for Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final, it’ll mark eight days — eight entire days — since Southern Nevadans got to see their beloved Golden Knights play.
In February 1945, in the thick of a very dark and cold night, Marthe Cohn, a blond-haired, blue-eyed, German-speaking, French Jewish woman, walked alone into Nazi Germany.
Author and Nevada Senior Citizen of the Year winner Nancy Nelson works to advance awareness of Alzheimers disease and offer hope to those living with it.
What do Red Rock Canyon, a passel of mid-20th century motels around town and a Las Vegas theater and high school have in common?
The fun of the Vegas Golden Knights’ inaugural season is turning many Southern Nevadans into hockey fans.